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Sacred Places
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A, thrums through the sultry air of a tropical after-
noon. Concealed in palms, strangler figs, and kapok trees, all the cicadas are
singing in unison. This taut sound shimmers over the vast plain, an invisible
presence among the very earthbound ruins of Angkor, capital of the ancient
Khmer civilization, in the heart of mainland Southeast Asia. In the rich drainage
basin of the Mekong River, a city of temples thrived for over seven centuries and witnessed the sweep
of wars, migrations, and religious beliefs over its flat and fertile surface. While the stones slowly yield
their secrets to archaeologists, worshippers continue to seek the spirits evoked by a site sacred to
Hindu and Buddhist alike.
From the monumental to the miniature, Southeast Asia contains sacred places that enliven the
senses and inspire awe, delight, and a curiosity to know and see more. They await all those who believe
in the transformative powers of travel, the exhilaration of being immersed in other cultures, and the
rewards of greater understanding. Such pursuits have a spiritual dimension all their own. What better
point of departure for a visual exploration of sacred places in Southeast Asia? Accompany the pho-
tographer for a selective look through the lens at a richly layered world.
Preah Khan Temple, Angkor, CambodiaThe stark contrast of massive stone blocks and the delicate tracery of bas-reliefs, found throughout Angkor, arrests the eye at Preah Khan, the “Sacred Sword” tem-ple constructed for Buddhist king Jayavarman VII, the master builder, in AD 1191. The frieze of apsaras, or heavenly dancers, recalls the era when the temple wasserved by one thousand dancers who performed in the evening by the light of torches and tapers. Empty niches above, once containing Buddha images, attest tothe zealous iconoclasm of his successor, a Hindu who converted the temple for the worship of Shiva. Deep within, a shrine still persists that is honored by the visi-tors of both faiths. There, silken banners move languidly in the minimal breezes, the smell of incense tinges the air, and offerings are quietly left at the altar.
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HEAD OF JAYAVARMAN VII AS A BODHISATTVA, BAYON TEMPLE, ANGKOR
Enigmatically smiling since the late 12th century, Jayavarman
VII, idealized as Avalokiteshvara (the “living Buddha” of com-
passion), looks down from the heights of the city that today
bears his architect’s imprint. Creator of Angkor Thom, the
“Big Capital,” Jayavarman VII’s four-sided likeness guards the
monumental gates of the walled city, built to accommodate
royalty on elephants. Within, the Bayon Temple projects his
outsize image in profusion from its forest of towers. Once
gilded, these sandstone images now bear the scars and mottled
surface that lend gravitas to its complexion.
STATUE OF VISHNU, ANGKOR WAT
Down a long, shadowed corridor echoing distant foot-
steps, one turns a corner into a slash of afternoon sun
streaming between the corbeled arches of roughened
stone. Facing the western light stands a latter-day effigy of
the Hindu deity Vishnu, the preserver, whose presence
and protection was invoked when the temple was dedi-
cated in AD 1150. With later monarchies came Buddhist
worshippers, who gave their name for the temple, wat, to
this masterpiece of Khmer architecture, which now
admits devotees of both faiths under its roofs.
Sacred
Places
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PAK OU CAVES, LAOS (ABOVE); ANDINTERIOR, PAK OU CAVES (TO THE RIGHT)
Flowing south from the Golden Triangle, the Mekong
muscles its way between jungle hills and limestone crags.
From the rail of the boat, the flood-tide marks on the dis-
tempered stone hint at the surge of the river during mon-
soon season. Wind and water have sculpted caves in these
walls, which have local importance as the abodes of spir-
its. North of Luang Prabang, the old royal capital of Laos,
the Pak Ou caves appear high above the river, a fantastical
collaboration between nature and humanity. Since the
15th century, it has been a shrine for Laotian royalty who
made pilgrimages to it in gilded barges. The Pak Ou caves
harbor a trove of Buddha figures left by centuries of devo-
tees. Rank upon rank of them come into view as one
climbs the long staircase from the water’s edge. Within the
embrace of the rock, the fissures recede into darkness,
punctuated by glimmers from myriad gilded figures.
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YOUNG BUDDHIST MONKS, NYAUNGSHWE MONASTERY, MYANMAR (BURMA)
On a chilly December morning in the highlands of
Myanmar, mist curls from the surface of Inle Lake, and
heavy dew shimmers on the tufts of grass outside the
weathered wooden monastery, raised on stilts above the
ground and crowned with gingerbread towers above the
large, oval-windowed assembly hall. From the deep black
of these openings drifts a low, even, rhythmic flux of
voices chanting in prayer. This otherworldly, meditative
moment, suspended in time, snaps back to the present
with a grin and a giggle, as two curious young monks slip
the bonds of concentration and their teacher’s gaze.
AT NYAUNG SHWE MONASTERY
The measured rhythms of a monastery’s day are marked
with a bell or gong, or as here, with the inventive recy-
cling of a brake disc to a more elevated task.
BUDDHA FIGURE, SULAMUNI TEMPLE,BAGAN, MYANMAR
On the river plain of the meandering Ayeyarwady
(Irrawaddy) River repose the remains of the 400 year
empire of Bagan. Whitewashed and gilded domes, their
spires needling the sky, declare the presence of myriad
temples and stupas. Each sits atop a stepped brick ter-
race, adorned with stucco and tiles like an elaborate wed-
ding cake. Out of the tropical midday sun one enters the
cool, lofty space of the Sulamuni Temple. Light pours
into the corridors through vaulted arches, revealing the
remnants of 12th century frescoes, rising from floor level
to the shadowed upper recesses where roosting bats mur-
mur in the gloom. In a niche facing east sits a massive
Buddha figure, his face an image of burnished tranquil-
ity. The abstract mosaic of gilded squares on his “side-
burn” reflects the renewed application of gold leaf by
worshippers in the endlessly repeated act of venerating
and preserving this effigy.
THIEN HAU PAGODA, HO CHI MINH CITY(SAIGON), VIETNAM
Cholon, the old Chinese neighborhood of this frenetic
city, fizzes with life: motorscooters and trishaws swoop
and weave in the traffic; pedestrians shop at outdoor
stalls and buy noodles from the curbside cooks; and
street vendors hawk their wares, from tennis shoes to live
birds, in a dissonant counterpoint of voices. Step off the
street into an oasis of calm: the jewel-box pagoda of
Thien Hau, dedicated to the Taoist sea goddess. Within
its walls resonate elements of Confucianism, Taoism, and
Mahayana Buddhism, brought by successive waves of
immigration from China, and adapted by the Viet people
to their spiritual needs. Away from the roar of the street,
one can find a moment for meditation beneath the coils
of incense, suspended like strange bedsprings from the
eaves of the tiled courtyard. Prayers on slips of papers are
attached to these spirals, so that they may waft to the
heavens on the perfumed smoke.
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ACOLYTES OF BUDDHA, WETHALI (VESALI), MYANMAR
In the far west of Myanmar, the Kaladan River runs to the
Bay of Bengal through rich, rice-growing lowlands that
were home to ancient dynasties for more than a millen-
nium. The roots of Buddhism go deep here; legend has it
that one of the few actual likenesses of Gautama Buddha
was cast in this region by a heavenly sculptor. In a field on
a hill, under brilliant sunshine, a double defile of life-size
stone acolytes follows a latter-day gilded Buddha who
strides toward a nearby monastery and pagoda.
Worshippers have added their own tribute to the carved
rice bowls of these supplicants.
NOVICE BUDDHIST NUN, YANGON(RANGOON), MYANMAR
Down an alley beside the sprawling, cacophonous Scott
Market in central Yangon comes a small, quiet, hesitant
figure. The shaven head makes it harder to divine her age,
but her robes and begging bowl mark her as a novice nun.
Theravada Buddhism, as practiced in Cambodia, Laos,
Burma, and Thailand, supports mendicant orders of
monks and nuns; the stately morning walk of alms-seek-
ers in saffron and pink robes is repeated daily on the
streets. Monasteries and nunneries provide an education,
sometimes the only free instruction available in a commu-
nity. While many children spend only a short time here
before returning to civilian life, they have accrued merit
for themselves and their families.
PAHTODAWGYI PAGODA, MANDALAY, MYANMAR
From the teak timbers of the U Bein bridge that straddles
Taung Thamen Lake, near Mandalay, one can see a distant
structure, rising from and reflected in the water, dazzlingly
white in the midday sun. Reachable only by boat, the
Pahtodawgyi Pagoda seems even more inaccessible for its
closed, turreted shape, built like a fortress by a 19th cen-
tury Burmese monarch. The play of light, shadow, and liq-
uid around it enhance the sensation of is ungainly other-
worldliness—part temple, part mirage, part mystery.
Born in a rural village inwestern New York,
began photo-graphing with a simple boxcamera at age eight, imag-ining herself a Life photog-rapher canoeing through thejungle to meet AlbertSchweitzer. This interestand dream pervaded yearsof musical study at VassarCollege, medical school atthe University of Pennsylvania, and practice as an internist and anesthesiologist.
In the early 1990s Baldeck left the operating room for thedarkroom, to work as a fine-art photographer in black andwhile. Her portfolio grew to accommodate portraiture, stilllifes, and landscapes, as featured in her books The Heart ofHaiti (1996), Talismanic (1998), Venice: A Personal View (1999), and Touching the Mekong (2003), which won adesign award in 2004 from the Association of AmericanMuseums. Since 1996 she has exhibited widely in the U.S. andabroad, and her photographs are found in museums and pri-vate collections.
Baldeck’s work in progress includes further exploration ofthe natural and man-made worlds. A collection of botanicalimages, titled “Closely Observed,” was mounted recently at theMorris (Philadelphia) and Holden (Cleveland) Arboretumsand at the U.S. Botanical Garden in Washington, DC.
For Further Reading
Baldeck, Andrea. Touching the Mekong. Philadelphia, PA: University ofPennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 2003.
Campbell, Joseph. The Masks of God: Oriental Mythology. New York:Viking, 1962.
Coe, Michael. Angkor and Khmer Civilization. New York: Thames &Hudson, 2003.
Courtauld, Caroline. Burma (Myanmar). Hong Kong: Odyssey, 1999.
Higham, Charles. The Civilization of Angkor. Berkeley, CA: University ofCalifornia Press, 2001.
Lurker, Manfred. Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses, Devils andDemons. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1987.
Maitland, Derek, and Jill Gocher. Traveler’s Vietnam Laos & CambodiaCompanion. Old Saybrook, NY: Globe Pequot, 1999.
Welty, Thomas. The Asians: Their Heritage and Their Destiny.Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott, 1963.
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SHRINE TO THE NATS, YANGON (RANGOON), MYANMAR
Rising beside the pavement along Yangon’s teeming water-
front is a massive banyan tree, its aerial roots a mass of grey
tentacles. In the recesses between them perch miniature
pagodas and altars, some bearing small figures. Bright gar-
lands hang from branches, while stubs of candles and
incense sticks mark recent offerings. This three-dimen-
sional collage is evidence of Burma’s ancient animism
where scores of spirits, the Nats, enliven and influence daily
life. Complementing, rather than competing with,
Theravada Buddhism, the Nats were folded into its pan-
theon nearly a thousand years ago. Each household has its
own small shrine, and in the countryside, natural features—
trees, rocks, waterfalls—represent the abodes of spirits who
must be recognized, revered, and appeased. Paying homage
to the local Nats is completely compatible with worshipping
Buddha in the temple, and home altars can accommodate
both in egalitarian harmony.All
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